Suicide Of Ronnie McNutt
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Ronald Merle McNutt (May 23, 1987 – August 31, 2020) was a 33-year-old American
US Army Reserve The United States Army Reserve (USAR) is a reserve force of the United States Army. Together, the Army Reserve and the Army National Guard constitute the Army element of the reserve components of the United States Armed Forces. History Origi ...
veteran A veteran () is a person who has significant experience (and is usually adept and esteemed) and expertise in an job, occupation or Craft, field. A military veteran is a person who is no longer serving in the military, armed forces. A topic o ...
from
New Albany, Mississippi New Albany is a city in and the county seat of Union County, Mississippi, Union County, Mississippi, United States. According to the 2020 United States census, the population was 7,626. History New Albany was founded in 1840 at the site of a gri ...
, who died from suicide by shooting himself under his chin during a
livestream Livestreaming, live-streaming, or live streaming is the streaming media, streaming of video or Digital audio, audio in real-time communication, real time or near real time. While often referred to simply as ''streaming'', the real-time nature ...
on
Facebook Facebook is a social media and social networking service owned by the American technology conglomerate Meta Platforms, Meta. Created in 2004 by Mark Zuckerberg with four other Harvard College students and roommates, Eduardo Saverin, Andre ...
. Recordings of the livestream went Viral video, viral on various social media platforms due to its shock value. The case became notable for the callous attitude expressed toward McNutt's death by some Internet users, as well as Facebook's slow response to the video, which had been shared to numerous other social media platforms and amassed a large Audience measurement, view-count before finally being taken down. As of 2025, the video continues to circulate online, with digitally altered versions appearing on social media. TikTok was also slow to respond to the video, which had appeared in many user feeds and constant re-uploads, leading to many users choosing to boycott the platform. The incident has raised awareness about both suicide prevention and what duty of care social media platforms owe to users and victims when it comes to content moderation, moderation of Graphic violence#Gore, graphically violent content.


Life and career

Born on May 23, 1987, McNutt was a resident of
New Albany, Mississippi New Albany is a city in and the county seat of Union County, Mississippi, Union County, Mississippi, United States. According to the 2020 United States census, the population was 7,626. History New Albany was founded in 1840 at the site of a gri ...
, and had served in the United States Army Reserve, including in Iraq. He worked at a Toyota plant. He had a variety of mental health problems, such as Major depressive disorder, depression as well as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the latter of which was a direct consequence of his time served in the Iraq War in 2007 and 2008. Some reports also said that he lost his job during the COVID-19 pandemic, though ''Rolling Stone'' disputed this. McNutt was a Christianity, Christian who regularly attended church.


Suicide

On August 31, 2020, McNutt began a
livestream Livestreaming, live-streaming, or live streaming is the streaming media, streaming of video or Digital audio, audio in real-time communication, real time or near real time. While often referred to simply as ''streaming'', the real-time nature ...
on List of Facebook features#Live streaming, Facebook Live. His best friend, Joshua Steen, noticed the stream. He told ''Rolling Stone'' that McNutt "often used a livestreaming platform as his form of therapy", regularly conversing with viewers on various topics; but he noticed almost immediately that this particular livestream was "different" from the others, as McNutt "appeared to be heavily-inebriated and despondent", and appeared to fire a rifle into the air at one point. Steen claimed that he attempted to intervene numerous times – particularly when McNutt misfired the rifle – hoping that Facebook would cut off the stream and end the video-feed, preventing people from seeing into McNutt's home while Steen sought police intervention. Facebook refused to cut the stream, claiming that the stream was not in any violation of its platform's guidelines, as McNutt had not yet attempted suicide. As the stream went on, McNutt's cell-phone rang frequently. The last call he received was from his ex-girlfriend, which he answered, leading to a brief argument between the two. After she ended the call, McNutt took hold of the gun and addressed the audience for the final time, saying his last words, "Hey guys, I guess that's it". He then aimed the rifle under his chin and Suicide methods#Shooting, fatally shot himself. About a second before his suicide, the phone he had left on his desk began to ring. The stream was captured by multiple viewers. The New Albany Police Department had been called to the scene during the livestream, but did not enter McNutt's apartment until after they heard the fatal gunshot; his phone was still ringing as officers searched the scene. Police Chief Chris Robertson reported that his officers had secured the perimeter and evacuated nearby residents before attempting to communicate with McNutt via speakerphone, to no avail. Robertson concluded that McNutt was "in such a mental state nobody could've gotten through to him". McNutt made a final post to Facebook shortly before starting the livestream. It read, "Someone in your life needs to hear that they matter. That they are loved. That they have a future. Be the one to tell them". Two days after his suicide, McNutt was buried in Snowdown Church of Christ Cemetery in Prentiss County, Mississippi.


Aftermath


Viral spread

Screencasts and downloads of the livestream were posted online, beginning its proliferation on the web. The video of McNutt's suicide was posted by users across social media platforms such as Facebook, YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram, often in the form of bait-and-switch content which would unexpectedly display the video alongside innocuous content. Variants of the video appeared in TikTok's "For you" page, so that users would scroll upon it without warning as the suicide automatically played, Shock site, with the apparent intention of frightening or upsetting viewers as a form of Troll (slang), trolling. The #ronniemcnutt hashtag had 15.6 million views on TikTok within the first few days after the suicide. According to ''Heavy (website), Heavy'', Facebook also initially refused to prevent the spread of recorded video of McNutt's misfire and suicide, but later agreed to remove the videos from its platform. McNutt had not expressed any intent for the viral spread to occur; Steen said that he did not think McNutt started livestreaming with the intention of killing himself, adding: "When you go back and follow his digital trail there is this beautiful telling of his life on various social-media platforms. He had a history of getting on a streaming service and talking." Though the platforms worked to remove the videos, new uploads of it would appear from separate accounts, while links to the video also began to appear in Reddit's true crime communities. As TikTok caught onto the video with its algorithms, uploaders evaded detection by placing the video after unrelated, innocuous imagery.


Public response

The incident was compared to the filmed suicides of television news reporter Christine Chubbuck and politician R. Budd Dwyer, R.Budd Dwyer. A large margin of the response online was one of sympathy towards McNutt, with users using the case as an opportunity to discuss mental health and suicide prevention, as well as concern over the video's prevalence online. Some TikTok users announced boycotts of the platform until the suicide video was completely taken down, while other users began posting prayers and messages of respect and commemoration for McNutt in the comments sections of the video uploads. Many parents reported that their children were highly distressed after encountering the video, with one girl becoming physically ill and needing to sleep with the lights on. Another parent argued that she fears her children, who accidentally discovered the video on TikTok, may have post-traumatic stress disorder. ''Institute of Mums'' circulated further warnings for parents about seemingly benign video content hiding the McNutt video, stating, "Alarmingly, there are also reports of the video being sandwiched in the middle of cute and funny Cats and the Internet, cat videos, which begin with viewer-friendly footage before quickly changing to the disturbing suicide." The then-Prime Minister of Australia Scott Morrison referred to the video as something that "no child should be exposed to", while Computer security, cybersecurity expert Susan McLean publicly recommended that parents prevent minor children from accessing the TikTok app until the video was fully removed.


Liability

The case sparked a debate over what legal liability is owed by Internet platforms that fail to promptly remove graphic and disturbing footage from public view, with the blame generally being placed on Facebook for failing to cut off the livestream during the initial suicide attempt. Joshua Steen, and many of McNutt's other friends, say they had reported the livestream to Facebook "hundreds" of times prior to McNutt's death; Steen had also called Facebook multiple times, and had called the police, neither of which stopped the stream before McNutt died by suicide. Steen declared, "if some woman posts a Nude photography, topless photo, their software will detect ''that'', remove it, and ban their account. That's apparently more offensive than my friend killing himself." Theo Bertram, TikTok's European director of public policy, stated that "a coordinated raid from the dark web" was responsible for ongoing circulation of the video. TikTok released a public statement saying, "Our systems have been automatically detecting and flagging these clips for violating our policies against content that displays, praises, glorifies, or promotes suicide. We appreciate our community members who've reported content and warned others against watching, engaging or sharing such videos on any platform, out of respect for the person and their family". Facebook, likewise, publicly stated, "We removed the original video from Facebook last month, on the day it was streamed, and have used automation technology to remove copies and uploads since that time. Our thoughts remain with Ronnie's family and friends during this difficult time".


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:McNutt, Ronnie 2020 controversies in the United States 2020 in Mississippi August 2020 in the United States Deaths by person in Mississippi Facebook criticisms and controversies Filmed deaths in the United States Filmed suicides Internet-related controversies Male suicides Privacy controversies Suicide and the Internet